In fact, with sublime orientation on keyboard rather on mouse, and when quick panel of opened buffers is available, tabs become less relevant. It's like EMACS, ctrl-x ctrl-b - got buffer list, and no tabs are needed.

There are some changes in 20090315 now: tabs have a slightly flatter look, and per-tab close buttons are now the default, rather than the single close button on this right hand side. The latter can be changed by editing Application.sublime-options.

Tabs are now optional too, with a separate setting for full-screen mode. Pressing Ctrl+Shift+O (bound to Select File) is a viable alternative to using the tabs to switch between files.

Assuming you have installed the Extra Full Screen package that was linked on a blog post,I would expect there to be an 'Extra Full Screen' directory under Application Data\Sublime Text\Packages, as well as an 'Extra Full Screen.sublime-package' file in Application Data\Sublime Text\Pristine Packages and Application Data\Sublime Text\Installed Packages.

If it's not there, I'd be interested to know if the 'Full Screen (Distraction Free)' menu item works correctly when selected via the menu item, rather than via pressing Shift+F11

tgkuel: menu bar is always system default, yeah. It would look better if it was drawn in the same style as the rest of the application, I agree.

Jon,my Firefox uses the Aquatint Black Gloss theme and has a black menubar with white font. I assume they use a very different architecture than yours and it may take an enormous effort to realize it in sublime. But it shows the menubar has not to be system default.This is not a problem to me - its just eye candy (but I love eye candies ).